Being liberal does little for progressives outside social identity issues like racism and lgbtq, but I know what you mean.
However, Harris is clearly not Bidens VP to please the progressive base. She is in because she is a political animal who ‘understands’ what the bought and sold Democratic leadership are about and that they gave her this position because of that. She will play along and certainly no more vote ‘with Bernie’ if inconvenient for the leadership. Kamala is very much like a younger Biden, a political careerist, with the present added superficial benefits of being of colour and female. They make a solid coherent pairing, just not one that will drive policy on behalf of ordinary people.
And after all, when the corporate Democratic leadership with full MSNBC, CNN, ABC backing whipped Butty, Klobuchar, Bloomberg and even dug up O’Rourke to end their campaigns and endorse and coalesce around Biden that fateful Monday before super Tuesday and every candidate except Warren was out; Biden surely kicked ass by being marginally ahead. And, there was nothing comfortable about Clintons win in 2016 either, if anything, it was even more shady.
DW Nominate scores measure economic Redistributive policies as well.
And yeah, your movement and its explanation for its own loss is so sad. You are basically admitting that you can not win a popular primary majority. You had to rely on the 'establishment' to split their vote, and then browbeat them with a convention. An anti-democratic, and dumb strategy.
Because it forgets that everybody involved, bar Bloomberg is a partisan Democrat. Buttigieg, Klobuchar, Beto, etc. They all want Democrats to win, and they all want a career. Of course, once they are basically a year into the Presidential primary, and gone through 4 contests, and not broken through, they would pack it in. Harris withdrew even earlier once it was clear she couldn't breakthrough.
And Bloomberg stayed in during Super Tuesday, and many of those who dropped out still got a few votes, as they were still on the ballot. Bloomberg and Warren both got over 2 million votes, so it was about even in terms of splitting. Bloomberg dropped after, not before Super Tuesday, and Warren took longer.
Biden in 2020, got 51.46% of the vote while having Bloomberg (6.92%), Pete (2.55%), and Amy (1.47%). Clinton only got 55.23%, in a one on one race.
Bernie plunged from 43.13% of the vote, to 26.63%. Even if you gave him literally every single Warren voter (which doesn't reflect reality, as lots of them wouldn't and didn't go to Bernie), it still doesn't make up for the deficit.
Some key states to illustrate.
In 2016 he got 85.69%/115,900 in his home state of Vermont. In 2020 he got 50.57%/79,921, barely a majority in his home state. Adding Warren doesn't make up his deficit. Biden well over doubled the vote count Clinton got, and nearly got double the percentage.
In 2016, Bernie won Michigan by a very narrow margin. In 2020, Biden won every single county in the state. Similar results happened across the Midwest.
Bernie didn't win a single Midwest state, bar a contested caucus result with Buttigieg in Iowa. You know the critical swing region that was the reason after 2016 for nominating him, according to Bernie supporters. No, across the entire region he plunged badly and his best results were all in safe blue cities and university campuses. Not the rustbelt workers. They had either left the Democratic primary process or voted for Biden, not Bernie. Or the swing suburbs. Biden as well.
None of that is Biden winning a 'marginal result'. He conclusively won a majority and did so even better than Clinton's majority.
Also if you think that, some other hopeless nominees dropping out are dirty tricks that cost you the campaign, how the hell are you supposed to handle Republicans? The masters of dirty tricks. Winning a primary is the easy thing to do. Winning a general is much harder.
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